Witness: Alabama man held wife before she sank

A physician testified Thursday he saw an Alabama man with his arms around his newlywed wife moments before she sank to the ocean's bottom and drowned during a honeymoon dive in Australia.

Dr. Stanley Stutz, an emergency room physician from Chicago, said he believed at the time eight years ago that Gabe Watson was trying to save wife Tina Thomas Watson after she became distressed underwater. Prosecutors, however, contend instead he witnessed the woman's murder, and another witness on the trip said he never believed the husband's story about what happened.

Jurors listened intently as Stutz testified; their perceptions of his story could be vital to the outcome of Watson's capital murder trial.

Stutz said he was in the water with about three dozen other divers when he looked down and saw Tina Watson floating on her back with her arms extended, moving slowly in the water.

"I was close enough to see her face," said Stutz. The woman seemed distressed but wasn't thrashing and moved like she "had no energy," he said.

A man Stutz said he now knows was Watson swam to the woman from the front, extended both of his arms under her armpits and lingered momentarily, the doctor said.

"Then they split apart. After, he went to the surface. She sank," Stutz said. The woman was clearly alive before the encounter, but she was dying afterward, he said.

Prosecutors contend Stutz saw Watson during the final scene a murderous act. They claim Watson turned off his wife's oxygen and let her lose consciousness or become distressed before approaching her again, turning on her air supply to cover up murder, and letting her sink.

Yet Stutz said he didn't think anything sinister had happened at first. Under cross examination, he said he believed Watson was attempting to help the woman.

"I thought Gabe was trying to save her," Stutz said. "I was surprised when I got an email that it was a murder trial."

Evidence showed Watson, 34, was certified as a rescue diver in 1999, about four years before his wife drowned in October 2003. She was a novice diver.

Tina Watson's scuba gear sat in a pile on a table at the front of the courtroom during testimony, just a few feet from Watson's seat at the defense table. He has remarried and was accompanied to court by his second wife.

The defense claims Tina Watson panicked during the dive and knocked off her husband's mask and air supply, forcing him to surface for help because current had carried her away from him.

A master diver who was on the diving trip, Kenneth Snyder of Estero, Fla., said he and his wife talked with a bubbly Tina Watson and her husband on their dive boat, the Spoilsport, before divers went in the water. Later, he said, he saw Watson board the Spoilsport alone and went to talk to him.

"I asked Gabe where was Tina at. He said, `She didn't come up,'" Snyder said. Snyder said he soon saw Tina Watson's body being taken out of the water and placed on the deck of another boat, Jazz II, that was about 100 feet away.

Watson didn't try to get to the Jazz II while others were trying to revive his wife, Snyder said. Snyder said he asked Watson what had happened underwater and immediately disbelieved the man's claim that his wife had panicked and knocked off his gear.

Snyder said he told Watson: "That's bulls---. That didn't happen." Snyder said a friend told Watson the same thing.

Earlier, Snyder said a rescuer only must press a single button on a distressed diver's gear to fill a bladder with air and send the other person to the surface.

During a brief cross examination, Kenneth Snyder said he didn't see either of the Watsons in the water and didn't know exactly what had happened.

Later in court, Gabe Watson dabbed at his eyes with a tissue as Snyder's wife, Paula Snyder, described the scene aboard the Spoilsport as another doctor on the trip, John Downing, told Watson his wife was dead.